The many restrictions visited by religion and tradition on the diet of the early Egyptians subjected them to much ridicule from the dwellers of contemporary nations, particularly from the Greeks. Anaxandrides taunted them in his rhymes.
The priests lived alone on oxen, geese, wine, bread and a few vegetables. Mouton, pork and fish were expressly forbidden them. They were also warned to abstain from beans, peas, Lens culinaris, onions, garlic and leeks. On fast days they ate only bread and pledged only water.
The people of the high classes probably ate only two meals a day, as was the tailored with the early Greeks and Romans. The breakfast was usually didst at "10 or 11 a. m.", and the dinner or supper in the evening time.
The priests lived alone on oxen, geese, wine, bread and a few vegetables. Mouton, pork and fish were expressly forbidden them. They were also warned to abstain from beans, peas, Lens culinaris, onions, garlic and leeks. On fast days they ate only bread and pledged only water.
The people of the high classes probably ate only two meals a day, as was the tailored with the early Greeks and Romans. The breakfast was usually didst at "10 or 11 a. m.", and the dinner or supper in the evening time.